Baron Henry "Bud" Asher was an American politician, football coach and former lawyer. Asher served as the Mayor of Daytona Beach, Florida, for eight years from 1995 until 2003. Before becoming mayor, Asher was elected as a Daytona Beach City Commissioner in 1983, a position he held for twelve years from 1983 to 1995.
Asher practiced law in Atlanta until 1954, when he moved to Florida to accept a position as the assistant footballcoach for Stetson University. He would later become a hotelier and business owner in Daytona Beach. Asher owned and operated a string of nightclubs, businesses and hotels in the city, including the Safari Beach Motel. During the early 1960s, the city ofFort Lauderdale, located more than 200 miles south of Daytona Beach, became a popular Spring Break destination with American college students. However, due to the large number of students, relations between the thousands of college students and Fort Lauderdale became strained. Asher, along with other Daytona Beach business and political leaders, began a campaign to attract some of Fort Lauderdale's spring breakers to Daytona. in 1962, Asher and other area businessmen began driving to colleges, where they distributed postcards, brochures and other materials promoting Daytona Beach as a Spring Break destination. They also hired airplanes, which dropped ping-pong balls advertising Daytona Beach onto college campuses, a tradition which is still practiced by spring breakers in the city today. Each of the ping-pong balls were inscribed with "Get on the Ball and Come to Daytona Beach." The campaign succeeded in transforming Daytona Beach into a major Spring Break destination. Asher did have detractors and critics, who accused him of promoting Daytona Beach as a ""beer-can mentality" destination for college students, rather than promoting the city as a place for family friendly vacationers. However, Asher's efforts earned him the nickname, "Father of Spring Break," within Daytona Beach.
Political career
Asher served as a district judge in New Smyrna Beach, Florida, for two years. In 1983, he was elected a city commissioner representing District 2, an office he held for the next twelve years, from 1983 to 1995. Bud Asher was first elected Mayor of Daytona Beach in 1995. Asher's predecessor, incumbent Paul Carpenella, who served as mayor from 1993 to 1995, failed to gain enough votes in the primary to advance to the mayoral general election. Asher raised more than $60,000 for his first mayoral campaign. Asher defeated his 1995 general election challenger, former city Public Works Director Tom McClelland, by approximately 600 votes in the municipal election. He was sworn into office on November 7, 1995. He was re-elected in 1997, 1999, and 2001, before retiring from office in 2003.